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  • Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and welcome to Biology Essentials video number 15. This

  • is on the cell membrane. One of my favorite demonstrations to do for people who don't

  • know a lot about biology is to extract the DNA from a banana. It's really simple. If

  • you were to google it you could find a quick recipe for taking DNA out of a banana. The

  • first step though is to add shampoo to it. And that's confusing to people. But if you

  • have an understanding of the DNA, where it's found and then how a cell is organized, it

  • shouldn't be that confusing. So the DNA sits here in the inside of a nucleus in a eukaryotic

  • cell. It's surrounded by a cell membrane. We call the that nuclear membrane. And then

  • the cell itself if surrounded by another cell membrane. Now if it's a plant cell it's going

  • to be cell wall around the outside. But on the inside of the DNA it's pretty mushy. And

  • you can get through that really quickly with just a blender. So if you add soap to that,

  • what does that do? Well the soap is going to dissolve the membrane. It's going to dissolve

  • the nuclear membrane and it's going to release the DNA, which you can eventually add to alcohol

  • and get it to come out of solution. Now why is a membrane really easily dissolved by soap?

  • It's because it's made of lipids. It's made up of fats. So it tells you a little bit about

  • the structure of cell membranes. And so in this video I'm going to talk about selective

  • permeability. What does that mean? It's that cells only allow certain things in and certain

  • things out. And it can regulate what gets in and what gets out of a cell. And it does

  • that using the cell membrane. Now our understanding of cell membrane is what's called the fluid

  • mosaic model. And I'll talk more specifically about that in just a second. Now there are

  • a few things, cholesterol, glycoproteins and glycolipids that are found within the cell

  • membrane that are important. But the majority of the important things in a cell membrane

  • are the phospholipids. Those are going to be the fats. And then the proteins. And so

  • the phospholipids are amphipathic. That means they have a part that likes water and a part

  • that hates water. Or they have dual nature. And what they do is they allow small and uncharged

  • particles to move through it. And proteins are going to be found within the membrane.

  • What they mostly do is regulate transport. What can get through and what can't. And they

  • allow things that are bigger and charged to actually get through. And so selective permeability

  • in all cells is formed through the cell membrane. And all living things have cell membranes.

  • Now not all living things have cell walls. That gives them more structure. And so I'll

  • show you a picture of a plant cell and the cell wall in that. Also pictures of bacterial

  • and fungal cell walls. But animals don't have cell walls. We just have that cell membrane

  • around the outside. Okay. So let's start with the parts of the cell membrane. Again I said

  • that the cell membrane is, our understanding of it is that it's a fluid mosaic model. Let's

  • first start with the mosaic. What does mosaic mean? It's made up of a number of different

  • things. And if you look at this, the first time you actually look at a picture of a cell

  • membrane or a diagram of it, you should be blown away by how complex it actually is.

  • It's made up of a number of different things. And it's also fluid. What that means is that

  • all of these things are moving. And so these things are called phospholipids. These are

  • those fats. And so they will actually migrate. They'll float around. And so all of these

  • things are influx. If we were to have a movie of it, all of these things would be floating.

  • The proteins would be floating. Everything would be floating. And so it would be moving.

  • And if it's not floating, if it's not fluid, then material can't actually get through.

  • So that's the fluid mosaic model. It's made up of a bunch of different things and then

  • it's also constantly influx or in movement. There's a few things on here that I would

  • like to point out before I actually talk just about phospholipids and proteins. And those

  • would be, let's start with cholesterol. Let's see if I can find cholesterol. Here's a cholesterol

  • molecule right here. Cholesterol molecule we like to, most people think of cholesterol

  • as bad, but it actually has a huge role inside our membranes. What it does is it'll actually

  • connect phospholipids together. And so what that does is it keeps the phospholipids from

  • drifting apart too quickly. And so when you get hot or when the temperature increases,

  • our cell membranes would start to fall apart if it weren't for cholesterol kind of grabbing

  • those phospholipids and holding them together. The other role that cholesterol does, it actually

  • keeps them apart so that they can't get too close. So as the cell membrane gets too cold,

  • cholesterol keeps those things apart. So cholesterol actually has a really important role inside

  • the cell membrane. Another thing here, we've got the glycoprotein. Glycoprotein is made

  • up of two things. Protein, which is going to be inside the membrane and then this glyco

  • means sugar. So it's going to have these strings of sugars on the outside. Glycoproteins, probably

  • the most famous one that you're familiar with are what are called antibodies. Antibodies,

  • which are important in the immune response are actually a form of a glycoprotein. And

  • then another thing would be glycolipids. Let's see if I can find a glycolipid. Oh here it

  • is. Glycolipid right here. Glyoclipid is going to be a fat, but it's also going to have sugars

  • attached on the outside. And glycolipids are important when we have signaling. So if I

  • have a molecule that's coming in and it's going to attach to this and maybe I want to

  • take some of that molecule in, there are going to be an attachment, almost like a key in

  • a lock between that molecule and the glycolipid. And so there's a number of different things

  • on a cell membrane. I'll talk more about those later when we talk about cells. But right

  • now I want to talk about two, phospholipids and then proteins. So phospholipid, lipids

  • are one of those major macromolecules that we have in all living things. But what's interesting

  • about phospholipid is that it has two parts to it. Okay, phospholipids are fats. And so

  • like any fat, most of the phospholipid is actually made up of carbon and hydrogen or

  • it's a hydrocarbon. And so that's half of the phospholipid. But what makes it different

  • from other lipids is that it has a head that has a charge to it. In other words, the head

  • has a charge. And that has a result of a phosphate group that it has on the inside. So this is

  • charged. And then there's no charge on the inside. Or another way to think about that,

  • is this head is going to be polar and the tail is going to be nonpolar. So what does

  • that mean? All of the heads will line up next to each other. All the polar parts of the

  • phospholipids will line up. And so the surface of a cell membrane is going to have a charge.

  • And then on the inside there's going to be no charge. And all the tails will face the

  • inside. Well, things like water, which is polar, is going to be on the outside of the

  • cell and on the inside of a cell. And it's going to be attracted to that membrane. But

  • it's not going to be able to move through the middle. And the reason why is that there's

  • no charge. Or it's nonpolar on the inside. So as a result of phospholipids, we get certain

  • things that can easily come across. And certain things that can't. And so let me talk about

  • two things that can easily come across. If it's really really small, as a particle then

  • you can sometimes just scoot across. And if you have no charge you can move across as

  • well. You can move through this kind of no zone, no fly zone here. And so an example

  • would be carbon dioxide and oxygen. So carbon dioxide and oxygen can freely move back and

  • forth and the reason why is that they have no charge and they're also really small. And

  • so example, when you breathe in, oxygen, how does that oxygen eventually get into the cell

  • itself where we need it for cellular respiration? Well it's just going to move through diffusion.

  • And it can move easily across that membrane because it's very small and it has no charge.

  • Likewise, when I breathe out, I breathe out carbon dioxide. How does that move? Well it

  • moves easily across because there's no charge. And so if it were just phospholipids that

  • made up membranes then we'd be out of luck. Because we couldn't move things that are large

  • or things that have any amount of charge. And that's where proteins come in. Proteins,

  • there's a number of different proteins. This would be a channel protein. And so it goes

  • all the way across. We'll sometimes have like peripheral proteins. So proteins come in a

  • bunch of different shapes and sizes. But what they essentially do is allow big things and

  • things that have a charge to move across. And so this process I'll talk about in the

  • next podcast is called Facilitated Diffusion. But what you can do with a protein is you

  • can actually move molecules across. So right here we're moving glucose it looks like across,

  • or a sugar. And here we're moving some particles through facilitated diffusion. So these are

  • things that maybe are too large or have a charge and couldn't move through this no fly

  • zone. One thing we used to think about was H2O and how does water move across the membrane?

  • Well it's small but it has a charge. It's polar. So it can't really move across this

  • middle. And so what scientists discovered was something called an aquaporin or a protein

  • that allows water to move through. And it actually can control the amount of water that

  • moves through. So actually water is moving through a tight little bind in this aquaporin.

  • And then we can also use proteins to actually do active transport. So this is the famous

  • sodium-potassium pump. And what it's doing is it's cashing in ATP to move sodium to the

  • outside and then potassium to the inside of a cell. And so proteins are important because

  • they allow big things and things with charge to actually make it across the membrane. So

  • those are cell membranes. But other organisms are actually going to have one other layer

  • outside of that. And that's called the cell wall. Now the cell wall gives them additional

  • selection of what gets in and what doesn't. And it also gives them rigidity. So for example

  • in a plant, the plant is going to have a membrane, that's this yellow portion. But it's going

  • to also have a cell wall around the outside. If we actually look at what that cell wall

  • is made up of, most of the durable part of the cell wall is actually cellulose. And that's

  • why it's hard to eat a tree for example. But what that cell wall gives them is structural

  • integrity. And so water, as water flows into a plant, if it was a human cell, it would

  • actually explode or lyse the cell. But as a result of this cell wall it can actually

  • hold that water in. Bacteria have a cell wall as well. And so bacteria have a cell membrane

  • on the inside but they have a cell wall outside of that. And some of them will have a capsule

  • on the outside of that. But this cell wall gives them protection as well. It's also what

  • we usually attack when we formulate antibiotics. It's what's actually killing the bacteria.

  • Now their cell wall is made up of a different chemical. It's not cellulose, but it serves

  • the same purpose. It's something called peptidoglycan that mostly makes up the durability. And then

  • this is a fungal cell. So a fungus will have a, fungi have a cell wall as well. But it's

  • actually made up of another chemical called chitin. And so cell wall just adds to the

  • protection that some cells have. But again, animal cells don't have that. And so that's

  • cell membranes, that's cell walls, selective permeability and I hope that's helpful.

Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and welcome to Biology Essentials video number 15. This

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